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Friday, March 25, 2016

McFarland-Mayberry-Begley Bulletin
for the week of March 21, 2016

Due Dates / Upcoming Events:

Monday, March 28th - Weekly reading logs due
Tuesday, March 29th - Home link due
Wednesday, March 30th - Early Release Wednesday
Thursday, March 31st -  Spelling due / ABL
Friday, April 1st - Home link due/ Monthly reading calendars due
It’s been quite a week!  With good fortune, we had 100% attendance all week, so no make-up tests for the McFarlands next week; in all my years, that has never happened!

Academic Updates:
 
No Reading or Writing updates this week.  Instead, here’s what we were up to this week:

  • Testing
  • Painting birds with watercolors and Sharpies
  • Testing
  • Reading from our new HF read aloud, Blood on the Riverrrrrrrr (ask your child how we say the title in the classroom)
  • Testing
  • Reading two old favorites, The Day the Crayons Quit and The Day the Crayons Came Home
  • Testing
  • Doing some “free-style” artwork with beloved crayons
  • Testing
  • Watching the movie “Newsies” in honor of our Greely ⅘ Color Guard
  • Testing
  • Doing some reflections in preparation for parent-teacher conferences
  • Testing
  • Playing Bingo!
  • Testing

Math
Due to the MEAs, we did not have any math to speak of this week.

Spelling
No spelling this week, due to testing.

Theme
Due to testing, I only saw the Mayberrys and McFarlands one time during the week.  During this time we continued grading the states projects and completed reflections for conferences.  Next week we will start a short unit on landforms.  Check out my website for new resources!

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

McFarland-Mayberry-Begley Bulletin
for the week of March 14, 2016
*sorry for the delay!*

Due Dates / Upcoming Events:
Monday, March 21st - snow day!
Tuesday, March 22nd - MEA testing
Wednesday, March 23rd - Early Release Wednesday / MEA testing
Thursday, March 24th -  MEA testing
Friday, March 25th - MEA testing/MEA make-ups

Academic Updates:

Reading Workshop
There is lots of book-sharing, recommendations, and asking for and passing along of historical fiction books in this room!  This week, we have focused on choosing HF chapter books from a wide variety of time periods.  I flipped through the baskets of books, telling the kids snippets about the time periods, plots, and authors, and it ended up being like an auction: “Who wants it?” I’d ask, and hands would go up like crazy!  I have multiple copies for instant book clubs and a bunch of series; many kids are reading the Sarah, Plain and Tall series (by Patricia MacLachlan, author of Journey, our mentor text from the character unit).  Mrs. Begley is reading the series to her class, and the McFarland readers are handing them around, giving advice (“Don’t read the back of the book; it gives away too much!”).  Lots of enthusiasm about books and reading -- what’s better than that?

Writing Workshop
Literary essays are done!  Writers used their Google Drive accounts to type the final drafts this week, and it was so easy to manage since we have 10 Chromebooks temporarily in each classroom, thanks to our upcoming MEA tests (more on that in last week’s school newsletter)!  I’m using the same checklist format to grade the essays as I used for the informational texts.  The checklist itself is familiar to the kids, as we’ve used them in each unit, and I added the E, M, P, D columns to reflect the points on a correlating rubric.  The meaning of the rubric is lost on most of our 4th grade writers, and this checklist has seemed to provide useful feedback.  Plus, it’s short enough to photocopy and send home so parents see the grades and feedback as well.  I’ll share those with you at our upcoming parent-teacher conference.  Next up: historical fiction stories!
 
Math
Let the division learning begin! This week we jumped into unit 6 and have begun the process of learning how to divide numbers beyond the basic facts. The first few lessons involved using extended division facts to answer problems. For example: if  27 / 9 = 3, then 270 / 9 = 30. Students also worked on finding the missing length of a rectangle when the area and one side is known. I have two Quizlets attached to my web page which support much of the work we did this week. Your child may enjoy using these to practice extended division. Due to the focus on MEA testing next week there will be no math homework. Whoot- whoot!

Spelling
This week due to guidance and project work, we didn’t have as much time for spelling.  Students completed homework for Unit 22 this week, but did not take the review.  Next week I will catch the kids up on the lessons of the unit, but due to testing, we will not have homework.

Theme
This week students worked hard to finish up their state projects.  Thanks to Lois Robeck, Tricia Burrell, and Jen Segal for pitching in to help with the trimming and proofreading.  Most students are finished and begun grading their projects with me.  I want students to have a hand in using the rubric and making decisions about how well they have met the criteria.  We will have the projects on display at conferences.
    Today, we had the pleasure of welcoming Frank Von Holzhausen, Zach Vanni’s grandfather, to help us kick off a four session STEM challenge to build a better mousetrap.  Frank talked about his job as a designer, gave background information on mice, and helped the kids to do a little planning.  During the month of April the kids will design and build their trap and Frank will return in May and the kids will present their designs to him.
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    Next week most of our classes are shot, due to MEA testing.  Once testing is over, we will begin a short unit on landforms.

Sunday, March 13, 2016

McFarland-Mayberry-Begley Bulletin
for the week of March 7, 2016

Due Dates / Upcoming Events:
Monday, March 14th - Weekly reading logs due
Tuesday, March 15th - Home link due
Wednesday, March 16th - Early Release Wednesday
Thursday, March 17th -  Spelling due  / Final States Quiz (50)
Friday, March 18th - Home link due
Adventure-Based Learning: Thursday, March 10
Thursday, Mrs. Murray visited again and brought some very hard challenges!  First students worked with a partner to build a linear structure out of four blocks on the floor.  Students then used one pointer-finger each to work together to pick up and carry their structure.  Mrs. Murray invited them to do tricks, such as walking the perimeter of the room and doing twirls while carrying their structure.  One group (Tommy, Maddie F., Lillian, and Preston) created a move that we nicknamed, “Crowning the Prince”!
    The second challenge was to hold two fingers together, palm-down, parallel to the floor.  A hula hoop rested on top of the finger-tips of the kids in the group.  They were to raise and lower the hoop without anyone’s fingers leaving the hoop.  It was way harder than we expected, and many groups fell into the Blame Game.  We processed in our groups and then again back in the classroom about how to be supportive when someone feels blamed.  One student shared that a teacher said that sometimes it’s not blaming; it’s just feedback said in a negative way, and we need to be careful to make sure we deliver our feedback in a positive way.  The frustrations around these issues provides opportunities for kids to learn their roles -- be they productive or otherwise -- in a group, and to recognize ways to change to help the whole group succeed.
    See photos below, and check out Mrs. Mayberry’s video: https://youtu.be/tYgB0K-Imzs



Academic Updates:

Reading Workshop
This week we focused on building background knowledge about immigration through Ellis Island.  We read The Memory Coat, a wonderful story about a Russian family who almost doesn’t pass inspection at Ellis Island.  The author’s note details her inspiration for writing the story and historical information about Russia and the trials of families’ journeys to America.  We have been noticing how handy those author’s notes are -- we always wonder what’s true and what’s from the author’s imagination as we’re reading.  
    Soon, we will highlight how authors use certain kinds of details and words to show the setting.  And then we will study how writers use the setting to show the mood of a time period.  All of this will contribute to careful craft moves as we begin writing historical fiction stories in writing workshop...soon!
When a book is so good, you just have to read it right HERE!...

...and then 3 minutes later, right HERE!

Writing Workshop
Our writers were so productive this week!  They wrote all three supporting idea paragraphs for their second flash-draft (using the term “flash” very loosely, given that we will be about two weeks late finishing this unit), and then we moved on to write introduction paragraphs.  Those turned out to be extra-sophisticated, because the Mayberrys thought their first draft was a bit ho-hum.  So we added a lead, choosing from a few sentence-starters, and then I showed them how to connect their ending sentences to that lead!  If they can do that, so can the McFarlands!  Sophistication everywhere!  Here’s the Mayberrys’ introduction paragraph, which we wrote together as practice before kids wrote their own intros for a different essay:
    Many people have experienced loneliness.  In the story “Spaghetti,” by Cynthia Rylant, a boy named Gabriel is lonely when he sits on a stoop, daydreaming about living outside.  By the end of the story Gabriel finds a kitten, who gives him company.  Like Gabriel, many lonely people eventually find company.
    Pretty good, huh?
    Final drafts next week!

Math
This week students worked with angle rotations, identifying angles according to their size (acute, obtuse and right) and a review of the overall unit concepts. Next week we will begin the unit 6 in the EM4 program. This unit concentrates primarily on division of large numbers, how to interpret remainders, more work with operations involving fractions and some more work with angle measurements.

Spelling
This week students looked at words ending in y and learned that if the ending is consonant-y, they need to change the y to i before adding a suffix, and if the ending is vowel-y, you don’t change it before adding the suffix.

Theme
This week students worked hard to turn their research into organized paragraphs.  We’ve had some good conversations about editing and when to use capitals with some of our information (capitals, names of landmarks, nicknames).  
    I have taught several workshops on planning and organizing a poster board to be neat and inviting.  We have definitely had some learning moments -  spelling the name of our state wrong, having lettering go downhill, starting in the middle of the board and running out of room, etc.  Some students have been motivated to fix it, by flipping the board over and starting over, and some chose not to.   My plan is to have the students grade the projects with me and reflect upon the process, so they can improve next time.  If students want to have color pictures on their poster, they need to print those at home and bring them to school, preferably by 3/16.

Additionally, I (Mrs. Begley) would love to have 1-2 parent volunteers per class on Tuesday, March 15th.  Please email me directly if you can help.  McFarland - 9:40am,  Begley 10:40 am, and Mayberry 2pm.

Please remember to keep studying the states!  Next week’s goal is 50 states.  The last quiz will be Thursday, March 17th.

Friday, March 4, 2016

McFarland-Mayberry-Begley Bulletin
for the week of February 29, 2016

Due Dates / Upcoming Events:

Monday, March 7th - Weekly reading logs due / Bring in poster boards (see theme)

Tuesday, March 8th - Home link due

Wednesday, March 9th - Early Release Wednesday

Thursday, March 10th -  Spelling due / ABL

Friday, March 11th - Home link due / Third States Quiz (40)

On Thursday, you should have received an email to sign up for spring conferences.  Please make sure you go to PTCfast.com and select a time to meet with the three of us.  You’ll need to read the original email for the code to enter.  We look forward to seeing you!

On Tuesday, March 8th, the Greely Color Guard will be having a fundraiser at Ricetta’s.  Anyone presenting one of our coupons for dine in or carry out will have 10% of their bill donated to the group.  If you’re interested in attending, please email Mrs. Begley directly for a coupon.

Academic Updates:

Reading Workshop
This week we focused our historical fiction work on some specific reading skills: envisioning, empathizing, and identifying possible themes of a story.  The kids are doing much more writing about their reading, and they are pulling in all kinds of strategies from their work on literary essays!  Next week, we will build background knowledge on the era of immigration through Ellis Island.  Some kids have already started sharing about their heritage and ancestors.  This is a great topic of conversation for the dinner table!

Writing Workshop
Well...we worked very hard, very deliberately on crafting high quality thesis statements this week.  It took a long time, but we got there!  We really had to back up and think about what a thesis statement is (an idea the reader generates when s/he reads carefully and deeply) and what a thesis statement is not (a fact or an idea the author shares with us).  Then, we evaluated sentences based on those definitions and also on criteria we’ve used in the past to determine which sentences make good thesis statements.

Kids worked in groups depending on which story they chose to write their essays about.  They used a talking piece (a la ABL) to take turns to share and give each other feedback, and then each partnership decided on a thesis statement.  Today, we worked on the supporting ideas, and next week we will write supporting idea paragraphs!

Math
In math this week students learned to add unlike fractions with denominators of 10 and 100, subtract fractions with like denominators, subtract mixed numbers and create line plots to represent a set of collected data.

Spelling
This week students practiced spelling words with consonant blends and reviewed irregular past tense verbs.  We also practiced adding the suffix -ing to words ending in y and final e.

Theme
This week students selected a state to study and began to research a variety of information, like geography, climate, attractions, and products.  Students will be turning the notes into paragraphs, which will be a part of their final product.  The overwhelming majority of students wanted to create posters (though a few have selected to make Jacob’s Ladders and brochures).  Please check in with your child this weekend and ask what s/he is making for a final product.  If making a poster, your child will need to bring a blank poster board to school by Tuesday, 3/8.  Next week I will be conducting workshops in how to plan, create, and display information in an organized and visually-pleasing manner.
    Please remember to keep studying the states!  Next week’s goal is 40 states.